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00:00Thank you very much.
00:30We spoke on Monday about Wimbledon being the oldest tennis tournament, but not nearly as old as a tournament that starts today down on the river.
00:44We're talking about the Henry Royal Regatta, and this knockout rowing tournament was established so long ago that it predates the sort of rowing tournament rules.
00:54It has its own. It has its own. And over the next five days, more than 200 races will take place on the river involving international crews and even Olympians.
01:03Rowing sounds like a lot of hard work to me, Rachel. Did you ever row?
01:08I signed up for rowing in Freshers' Week. You know, they have a freshers' fair when they make you sign up for everything.
01:13And then I found out it was something like 5am you had to be on the river. And in four years, I never even went close.
01:19No?
01:20No. Don't do 5am for anything.
01:21But of course, our beloved Susie Dent, with whom we shall have a little conversation shortly.
01:26Susie the bicep dent.
01:28She's marvellous, you know. And I have actually... Rowing does her the world of good when it comes to arm wrestling.
01:36But we'll talk to her about that in a couple of minutes.
01:38Dark horse, that one.
01:39Very dark. And very fast along the river, too, by all accounts.
01:43Now then, Rachel, we're joined once again by Andrew Fenton.
01:48Two-time champion from Roos in the Vale of Glamorgan.
01:51Father to seven-year-old Elijah.
01:53And ten-week-old Harrison.
01:55That's right.
01:56Fantastic. And I wonder if Elijah's listening. I hope he is.
01:59I'm sure he will be.
02:01In fact, viewing rather than listening as well.
02:02Yeah, and playing along. He's good with his numbers.
02:04Is he? Yeah, yeah.
02:05Go on, give him a wave, then, little Elijah there.
02:07Hi, Eli. Hi, mate.
02:08All right. And you're joined, Andrew, by Chris Worthing, a sales assistant from Barrie.
02:14Loves his football, loves his QPR, and runs regularly and completed a half-marathon for the Mind Charity recently, yeah?
02:21Yeah.
02:21But now you've got a bit of a bad knee.
02:23Yeah, so it's put me off a bit, but I'm glad I did it.
02:25Is it on the mend?
02:27Hopefully, yeah.
02:28You'll have to run pretty fast to catch up with that Andrew Fenton, I'll tell you.
02:31Let's have a big round of applause, then, for Andrew and Chris.
02:34APPLAUSE
02:36And over in the corner, Susie Dent, the formidable arm-wrestling contender.
02:44We've had a couple of goes, and I'm not altogether sure that I won.
02:47No, you did. I think you were just being very kind.
02:49Only just.
02:51And when did you take up rowing?
02:52Me. I took it up for a charity event where I competed with an Olympian at Henley Women's Regatta, having never stepped foot in a boat before.
03:03So I had about ten hours training, and then we competed at Henley, and then I got the bug.
03:08It is the most brilliant thing. Just leave the world behind.
03:11Back to the river.
03:11And John, are you a rower?
03:15I'm a very poor rower. I made an attempt a few months ago, but rather like Stan Laurel, or somebody like that.
03:21I just kept going round in a circle, round. More practice needed, a lot more.
03:25All right. Excellent stuff. More great impressions from you a little bit later on, John.
03:30But now we're going to turn to Andrew Fenton to get us underway. Andrew.
03:33Hi, Rachel.
03:34Hi, Andrew.
03:35Consonant, please.
03:36Thank you. Start today with R.
03:39And a vowel.
03:41O.
03:43Consonant.
03:45L.
03:46Vowel.
03:48I.
03:49Consonant.
03:51T.
03:52Vowel.
03:54A.
03:55Consonant.
03:57B.
03:59Another consonant.
04:01N.
04:01And a vowel to finish, please.
04:04And lastly, you.
04:07And here's the countdown clock.
04:08BELL RINGS
04:10BELL RINGS
04:12BELL RINGS
04:14BELL RINGS
04:16BELL RINGS
04:18BELL RINGS
04:20BELL RINGS
04:22BELL RINGS
04:24BELL RINGS
04:26BELL RINGS
04:28BELL RINGS
04:29BELL RINGS
04:30BELL RINGS
04:36BELL RINGS
04:38BELL RINGS
04:40BELL RINGS
04:41Six. Chris. Six. So, Andrew, brutal. Chris. Tribal. And tribal. Very good. Both. Yes. Like those. Can we add to that, John? Yeah, we can, actually, Nick. Orbital was there for a rather nice seven. Yes. And another seven. Rain out. Rain out. North American terms, you might expect, but it is when a show or an event is cancelled through rain. Brilliant. Six all. And Chris, letters game.
05:11Hi, Rachel. Can I get a consonant, please? Thank you. Start with P. And another. M. And another. G. A vowel, please. E. And another. I. And a consonant, please. N. And a vowel, please. A. And a consonant.
05:37D. And a final consonant, please. And a final. R. Stand by.
05:45D. And a consonant, please.
05:52D. And a consonant, please.
05:54D. And a consonant, please.
06:03D. And a consonant, please.
06:13D. And a consonant, please.
06:15D. Now, then, Chris.
06:17D. Eight.
06:18D. And eight, Andrew.
06:20D. Eight.
06:21D. Right. A little hesitation there.
06:23D. Chris.
06:23D. Dream in.
06:25D. And?
06:26D. Margined.
06:27D. Margined. D. Yes, no hesitation, necessary.
06:29D. It's in. Very good.
06:31D. And in the corner, Suzie and John.
06:33D. Those are the ones that we got in that order as well.
06:35D. Well done. All right.
06:36D. 14.
06:37D. 14 points apiece.
06:38D. And it's our first numbers game, Andrew.
06:40Two from the top, please, and four from anywhere else.
06:42Thank you, Andrew.
06:43Two large, four, a little.
06:44And the first one of the day is eight, four, seven.
06:50Another seven.
06:51And the large two, 75 and 100.
06:54And the target, 241.
06:57Two, four, one.
07:09Andrew?
07:30240.
07:31241 away, Chris.
07:33No, only 249.
07:34249.
07:35So with you, Andrew?
07:3675 minus eight minus seven.
07:4075 minus eight minus seven for 60.
07:43Times four.
07:44Times four.
07:45Yep, 241 away.
07:48Now, where's this one got to, Rachel?
07:50Leave it with me.
07:51Leave it with you, by all means, as we go to our first tea time teaser, which is on a debit.
07:56And the clue, he bought goods by deception on a stolen debit card.
08:00He bought goods by deception on a stolen debit card.
08:06Welcome back.
08:21Welcome back.
08:22I left you with a clue.
08:22He bought goods by deception on a stolen debit card.
08:26And the answer is, he obtained goods by deception.
08:31Obtained.
08:32Now, Rachel, what have you obtained for us?
08:35Yes, I found it.
08:37If you say 100 times seven is 700, minus eight for 692.
08:44Divide that by four for 173, and then add the 75 and take away the other seven.
08:49Very neatly done.
08:55Well done.
08:56Well done, Rachel.
08:57So, 21 plays Chris's 14, and we're with you, Chris, for a letters game.
09:02Chris.
09:02A consonant, please.
09:03Thank you, Chris.
09:05T.
09:05And another.
09:07P.
09:08And a vowel.
09:10U.
09:12Another vowel.
09:13E.
09:14A consonant.
09:15Zid.
09:18And another consonant.
09:20L.
09:21A vowel.
09:23I.
09:25A consonant.
09:27T.
09:29And a final consonant, please.
09:31And a final S.
09:33Stand by.
09:33T.
09:38T.
09:44T.
09:47T.
09:47T.
09:47T.
09:48T.
09:49T.
09:49O.
09:49T.
09:49Chris?
10:05Only a five.
10:07And Andrew?
10:09Seven, I think.
10:10All right. Chris?
10:12Pelt.
10:12Now then.
10:14Spittle.
10:16Very nice.
10:17Well, not very nice, but yes.
10:19Spittle, yeah.
10:21Normally aimed at a spittoon.
10:24What else have we got there, John?
10:26Putties was there for seven.
10:28Putties.
10:29Putties, yes.
10:30To apply putty to something.
10:31Putties.
10:32All right.
10:3228, please.
10:3314.
10:34And Andrew?
10:35We're off again.
10:37If I could start with a consonant, please.
10:38Thank you, Andrew.
10:40D.
10:41And a vowel.
10:43O.
10:44Consonant, please.
10:46M.
10:47Vowel.
10:49E.
10:50Consonant.
10:53S.
10:55Consonant.
10:57T.
10:58Consonant.
11:00W.
11:01Vowel.
11:04A.
11:05And a consonant, please.
11:07And lastly, L.
11:10Count time.
11:10S.
11:12Consonant.
11:22E.
11:23Investor.
11:25Andrew?
11:42Seven.
11:43Yes, Chris?
11:44Only a six.
11:45And your six?
11:47Slowed.
11:48Now then.
11:49Meadows.
11:50Meadows.
11:51Very nice.
11:52Now, at the corner, what offerings have we got from this corner?
11:56Meadows is a nice seven, but there's another seven in there, isn't there?
11:59There is, yes, a more unusual one.
12:01Waldos, or Waldos, W-A-L-D-O-E-S.
12:04They are remote-controlled devices for handling things.
12:08We always have hundreds and hundreds of terms for remote controls, and that's one of them.
12:15It is probably American, but it comes from the name Waldo Jones,
12:20who is a fictional inventor in a science fiction story.
12:23Really?
12:24Yes.
12:25Well done, Susie.
12:2535 plays 14, and it's numbers time for Chris Fenton.
12:30Chris?
12:30Can I get one big on five small for anyone, please?
12:33Thank you, Chris.
12:33One large five little coming up, and this time your five small ones.
12:38A ten, seven, eight, another eight, and another ten.
12:43And the large one, 25.
12:45And the target, 715.
12:47Seven, one, five.
12:50Seven, one, five.
13:20What's Chris?
13:21Uh, seven, one, seven.
13:24Two away.
13:24How about Andrew?
13:25Seven, one, six, I think.
13:27Just sneaking in there.
13:29Let's hear from you.
13:30Ten plus seven is 70.
13:32Yep.
13:33Times ten is 700.
13:35Oh.
13:35Oh, sorry.
13:36Sorry.
13:36Ten times seven is 70, beg your pardon.
13:38Ten times seven is 70.
13:40Times the other ten is 700.
13:42Is 700.
13:42Is 700.
13:44And add the other, the two eights.
13:46And then the two eights for one away.
13:47There we go.
13:48Still, it's as good as a mile, really, isn't it?
13:51One point.
13:52Rachel, take us there.
13:53Yeah, a couple of ways.
13:54One of them, you could have said, eight times eight is 64.
13:59Add the ten for 74.
14:01Times the other ten for 740.
14:04And take the 25.
14:06Seven, one, five.
14:06Well done.
14:07Well done.
14:08Well done, Rachel.
14:09So, 42 plays, which is 14.
14:13As we turn to John Culshall.
14:15Now then, you've got a little story about the great Marlon Brando.
14:20Oh, this is a lovely story.
14:22I was working a few weeks ago with the actor Kevin McNally, who was telling me this story.
14:28And it's all about how Hollywood stars and their demands.
14:33And the story goes that they were on set one day and Brando was there looking a bit contemplative.
14:39And he said to one of the runners, one of the people on the set, he said,
14:43look, I'm just not feeling this part at the moment.
14:47I need something to lock me into the character a bit more.
14:50Maybe if I'm wearing some chunky hobnail boots, that will just lock me into the character.
14:56Could you get me some chunky hobnail boots?
15:00And the person said, yes, of course, Mr. Brando.
15:01Straight away, Mr. Brando, we will do that for you.
15:04So off they go and they bring him back some hobnail boots and he puts them on and he's sitting there behind this desk.
15:09And he's going, no, it's not working.
15:12I'm still not feeling in character sufficiently.
15:16I need something different.
15:17Maybe if you could, maybe you could take these hobnail boots away.
15:21And if you bring from me, maybe, maybe see if you can find a pair of red stilettos that would fit me.
15:28Bring me those and I'll wear those.
15:30Maybe that would be the thing that can just get me into character a little more.
15:35So off they go.
15:36And this very kind, dutiful runner brings back a pair of red stilettos big enough to fit Marlon Brando.
15:43And he puts them on and he goes, no, I'm still not feeling this.
15:49This is, no, I'm still not sufficiently in character.
15:53Maybe, maybe if you bring me one hobnail boot and one red stiletto and I'll see if that will lock me into character.
16:02Yes, of course, Mr. Brando, we will do that straight away.
16:04And then at this point, somebody near is looking at Brando as if to say, what are you playing at with all these demands?
16:13And then he turns to them and he says, can you believe they're actually doing it?
16:18Can you believe they're actually doing it?
16:20And it just shows that Hollywood stars, when they have that big, big sort of punching power, almost anything is extraordinary.
16:29The divish demands.
16:31Brando was playing with that.
16:32And that was told to me by Kevin McNally, the actor.
16:36I was working with him as part of the lost sitcom season for the BBC.
16:41And we were recording a lost episode, or what was thought lost, of Hancock's Half Hour.
16:47The script existed by Galton and Simpson, but the original radio episode had been lost.
16:52We look forward to that. Great stuff, John. Well done. Thank you.
17:00Thank you, the great John Culshaw there.
17:02So it's 42 to 14.
17:03Andrew's in the lead and it's Andrew's Leathers game now.
17:07Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:07Thank you, Andrew.
17:09F.
17:10And a vowel.
17:12O.
17:13And a consonant.
17:16D.
17:17Vowel.
17:19A.
17:20Consonant.
17:22M.
17:23Vowel.
17:25O.
17:27Consonant.
17:27R.
17:29Vowel.
17:32I.
17:33And consonant to finish, please.
17:35And to finish, H.
17:37Stand by.
17:37T.
17:48B.
17:49What?
17:49Come hop.
17:53B.
17:57I.
17:58I.
17:59I.
17:59I.
18:00I.
18:00I.
18:01andrew six and chris six andrew hairdo and chris worthings same word
18:16there we go just compare well done hairdo yeah we got that over there as well lovely air too
18:23what else have you got there suzy that's that it actually it's really tricky that one yeah
18:29a few illusions down to fours all right but we won't we don't need any of those so 48 plays 20 and
18:37it's chris's letters game chris can i get a consonant please thank you chris r and another
18:42w and another c and another h uh vowel please o and another a and another
18:58e a consonant g and another consonant please and lastly s
19:07stand by
19:09so
19:18yes chris uh seven and seven two sevens chris charges thank you same word there we go
19:34charges and in the corner john and suzy uh yeah a couple more sevens roaches was there for seven and uh
19:57cowages which is rather an intriguing one it is um uh you can spell it uh just as as it sounds
20:05cowage but you can put an h in there as well so it's c-o-w-h-a-g-e-s uh which will give you an
20:10eight and they're leguminous climbing plants with hairy pods that cause stinging and itching so not
20:16very pleasant um but that will give you an eight at least
20:18carriages well done
20:20thank you suzy
20:22thank you suzy and now andrew ahead by 55 to 27
20:27it's numbers time for you
20:29two from the top and uh four for an hour off please
20:31thank you andrew another two large four little ones selection
20:35and for this round your little ones are five seven four and seven and the big ones one hundred and
20:43seventy five and this target 853
20:46eight five three
20:47so
20:59so
21:03so
21:07so
21:11Andrew?
21:198, 5, 1.
21:21Two away, Chris?
21:23None, I think.
21:24No? Let's stick with Andrew, then. Andrew?
21:27Um, 8... Sorry. 5 plus 4 is 9.
21:315 plus 4, 9.
21:33Times 100.
21:34Times 100, 900.
21:36And then subtract 7 times 7.
21:37And then 7 times 7, 49, 8, 5, 1.
21:42Two away.
21:43Now, where have those two got to, Rachel?
21:458, 5, 3.
21:47Um, quite a few ways for one away, but I will have another look.
21:51So I'll leave that one with you as we turn to our second tea-time teaser,
21:54which is I act on it.
21:56And the clue, his bad behaviour on the rugby field earned him this.
22:00His bad behaviour on the rugby field earned him this.
22:07Welcome back.
22:20I left you with a clue.
22:21His bad behaviour on the rugby field earned him this.
22:24And, indeed, it earned him a citation.
22:27Citation.
22:29Now, Rachel, 8, 5, 3.
22:31I found it, eventually.
22:33If you say 75 minus 7 is 68,
22:37the other 7 plus 4 is 11,
22:40times them together for 748,
22:42and then add the 100 and add the 5 for 8, 5, 3.
22:46There we go.
22:47Well done.
22:48APPLAUSE
22:49Well done, Rachel.
22:5262 plays 27, and it's Chris's letters game.
22:55Chris, can I get a consonant, please?
22:57Thank you, Chris.
22:58R.
22:58And another one.
22:59N.
23:02A vowel.
23:04A.
23:05Another vowel.
23:06O.
23:07And another.
23:09E.
23:09A consonant.
23:11T.
23:13And another.
23:14D.
23:16And another.
23:18Q.
23:19And a final consonant, please.
23:21And a final T.
23:24Gallup time.
23:24A coherent.
23:25Get started.
23:26Here we go.
23:27The aftermath.
23:32And another.
23:37Again, we love you.
23:42And in one moment,
23:42part ahentically,
23:47Is that what you called?
23:47Here we go.
23:50Come on.
23:51Chris?
23:56A seven.
23:57A seven and?
23:58Only six.
23:59Your six?
24:00Ranted.
24:02Ranted.
24:03And Chris Worthing?
24:04A rotated.
24:06Rotated.
24:07Very good.
24:08Excellent.
24:09Excellent.
24:10What have we got there, John?
24:12We had one to rhyme with rotated.
24:14We got notated.
24:15Very good.
24:16A seven.
24:17Anything else?
24:17No, that was it.
24:18That's it?
24:19Yes.
24:19All right.
24:20Notated.
24:2062 to 34, and it's Andrew's letters game.
24:24Andrew.
24:25Consonant, please.
24:26Thank you, Andrew.
24:27P.
24:28And another one, please.
24:30S.
24:32And vowel.
24:34A.
24:35Vowel.
24:36I.
24:37Vowel.
24:39A.
24:40Consonant.
24:42V.
24:43Consonant.
24:45L.
24:47Consonant.
24:49C.
24:49And a vowel, please.
24:52And finally, O.
24:55Countdown.
24:55rock and roll.
25:02Yeah.
25:11Oh.
25:12laughs.
25:15Oh.
25:15Johnny.
25:15Oh.
25:15Yeah.
25:16In 2020.
25:16Listen to this.
25:17Oh.
25:18Like, oh.
25:19Oh.
25:19Oh.
25:19Oh.
25:20Oh.
25:20Oh.
25:21Oh.
25:21Yeah.
25:21Oh.
25:22Oh.
25:22Oh.
25:23Oh.
25:23Oh.
25:24Oh.
25:24Yeah.
25:24Oh.
25:24Oh.
25:25Oh.
25:25well Andrew six a six Chris I'm the same yes and saliva saliva and vocals what
25:36have we got there John two more sevens spatial yes and asocial a in Greek means without so
25:45agnostic means without knowing yeah and asocial is similar to antisocial means avoiding social
25:51interaction or it can be actually hostile to and to others very good 68 plays 40 now then Susie
25:58and your wonderful origins of words what gem have you got for us today well it's funny you should say
26:05gem actually because this comes from Gemma Cummings who emailed in to say why when we're listening in
26:12on somebody's conversation or eavesdropping do we talk about earwigging and it all goes back to
26:18the humble earwig no surprise there um otherwise known in uh in dialects were some wonderful terms
26:24fork in robins erry wiggle and witch twitch bell uh all lovely lovely terms um as I say dialect terms
26:32but written references to the insect uh date back over a millennium and earwig itself is an anglo-saxon
26:39word so it was around in uh old english and the wicka in anglo-saxon meant an insect so it was an ear
26:46insect but why the ear in the first place well the answer lies in the popular and very ancient
26:52superstition that the tiny creature would scuttle into people's ears while they were asleep and worse
26:59still uh the same superstition held that the insect would bore into uh the sleeping victim's skull
27:06uh not particularly nice and we weren't alone in thinking this many other nations did as well so
27:11the earwig's name in french is percery which is an ear piercer and in german they called it an
27:17earworm so literally an earworm which of course means something different to us today that's a
27:21piece of music that you just can't get out of your head but fortunately there was apparently a remedy
27:26to the predicament uh the roman philosopher pliny this is how ancient the belief was it suggested that
27:32if another person was to spit in the victim's ear the earwig would uh be flushed out i suppose uh
27:39ceremoniously um i'm sure some people decided not to try that and let the earwig um do its business
27:45without having someone spit in your ear um but the idea of earwigging goes back to that idea i suppose
27:51of sort of obviously just just sort of straining your ear to hear something or eavesdropping as i say
27:56and that goes back to um again rather ancient belief that if you stood in the uh the eavesdrop
28:03which was the zone um between two houses there were very firm laws about where water could fall
28:08between neighboring houses if you stood there under the eaves that would be the best person to pick up
28:12any conversation where water was falling brilliant well well done
28:16and you're in the lead chris's letters game chris uh consonant please thank you chris d and another
28:28g uh vowel e and another u uh consonant n vowel i uh consonant b
28:46e uh consonant t and a final vowel please and a final e count down
28:56so
29:06so
29:08yes chris eight and eight and andrew just a seven you're seven debting chris uh debuting well done chris that's excellent excellent excellent very very good
29:20yes chris
29:27eight and eight and andrew just a seven you're seven debting chris uh debuting
29:33uh debuting
29:35well done chris that's excellent excellent very very good
29:39very good
29:43clamberi up there 48 to uh 68 now as we uh turn to the corner and see what contribution we can uh expect from them
29:51uh just to say
29:53uh just to say debting not there debiting would be there but not
29:55debting
29:56um but we had debuting
29:58yeah that was there and another nice seven
30:01uh bringing to mind julio iglesias beguine
30:04it's it's i mean it goes back away
30:07yes it does
30:08benny goodman lots of people ever fitzgerald frank sinatra
30:11yeah lovely stuff thank you susie 68 plays 48
30:14and fitz the final letters game andrew
30:18consonant please thank you andrew
30:21ah and another one please
30:25k
30:26vowel o
30:29vowel i
30:32consonant
30:33n
30:34consonant
30:36v
30:37vowel
30:40e
30:41consonant
30:43p
30:44and a consonant
30:45and lastly m
30:47stand by
31:14yes andrew
31:21i'll risk a seven
31:23a seven and chris
31:24only a six
31:25your six
31:26pinker
31:27pinker
31:28and
31:29andrew
31:30invoker
31:30excellent yes
31:33you certainly can be an invoker an invoker of national security for example somebody who calls on
31:38something or calls for something very good and john yeah no nothing better than that over here that was a
31:43good one
31:44well done andrew 75 to 48 and here we go it's the final numbers game and it's for chris worthing
31:49chris
31:50uh can i get two large and four
31:54and four little ones for the final numbers game of the day and these tiles are nine four
32:02seven seven and the large 275 and 50 and the target 364
32:09three six four
32:11and
32:13and
32:15and
32:17and
32:19and
32:23and
32:25and
32:27and
32:29and
32:31and
32:33Chris?
32:42Er, three, six, eight.
32:44Three, six, eight, four away.
32:46And Andrew?
32:47Three, six, four.
32:48Three, six, four.
32:49Now then.
32:50Nine minus seven is two.
32:52Yep.
32:52Plus 50 is 52.
32:54Times seven.
32:56Times the other seven.
32:56Perfect.
32:57Three, six, four.
32:58Well done.
32:59Well done indeed.
32:59Well done, Andrew.
33:04As we go, scores standing at 85 to 48 into the final round.
33:08You know the score.
33:10Fingers on buzzers.
33:11Let's reveal today's countdown conundrum.
33:15My word.
33:17Mr Fenton.
33:18Marvelled.
33:20Marvelled.
33:20Let's see whether you're right.
33:23Very good.
33:28That's fantastic.
33:30I would put that down in about half a second or something.
33:35I don't know.
33:35That was remarkable.
33:36Well done indeed.
33:37I'll come back to you in a minute, Andrew.
33:38But bad luck, Chris.
33:40You came up against a very strong contender here.
33:43But you did very well.
33:4348 points.
33:45So back to Barry with your goodie bag.
33:49Now then, Andrew, we'll see you tomorrow.
33:51Thank you very much.
33:51Well done indeed.
33:52All right.
33:53We'll see you tomorrow.
33:53And over in the corner, we shall see those two hooligans too.
33:57Suzie and John, we'll see you tomorrow.
34:00Looking forward to it.
34:01Well done.
34:01All right.
34:02Excellent stuff.
34:02We should do a rematch of the arm wrestle between you and Suzie in the meantime.
34:06Do you know, I've aged a lot and the muscles got slack.
34:09In fact, it's...
34:10Oh, excuses are coming in early.
34:11Suzie, now's your moment.
34:12Okay.
34:13She would win.
34:14All right.
34:15We'll see you tomorrow.
34:16See you tomorrow.
34:16Same time, same place.
34:17You'll be sure of it.
34:18A very good afternoon.
34:20Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:28at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:31You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:35When it comes to internet shopping, no one does it better than us Brits.
34:41Find out tricks of the trade in Secrets of Online Shopping, tonight at 8 on 4, and after
34:46all the high-profile cases earlier this year, we still don't know too much about the game
34:50hunting industry, so we're going to meet the women who kill lions at 9.
34:55Coming up next, come dine with me, Getsol, Cupply.

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